
EU Commissioner Alarmed by Unsafe Products on Chinese Platforms
European Union Justice Commissioner Michael McGrath expressed shock at dangerous goods sold through Shein and Temu, citing toxic children's items and regulatory violations. The discovery came amid an EU-wide investigation into non-compliant products flooding European markets.
Dangerous Product Findings
Secret shopper operations revealed multiple safety violations: baby soothers with detachable beads causing choking hazards, children's raincoats containing toxic chemicals, sunglasses lacking UV protection, and kids' shorts with dangerously long drawstrings. Cosmetics included Lilial - a reproductive toxin banned since 2022.
Regulatory Response
"We have a duty to protect European consumers," stated McGrath, noting 12 million daily low-value parcels entering the EU - triple 2022 volumes. The EU considers abolishing the €150 duty-free threshold and implementing per-package handling fees, mirroring recent US actions against Chinese retailers.
Market Impact
The commissioner emphasized unfair competition for EU businesses complying with strict safety standards while facing non-compliant imports. Safety Gate, the EU's alert system, recorded 4,137 warnings in 2024 - mostly cosmetics and toys.
Company Responses
Shein announced $15 million in safety initiatives including 2.5 million product tests and vendor removals. Temu highlighted partnerships with TÜV SÜD and SGS for compliance monitoring. Both maintain commitment to EU regulations despite findings.